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Old Jun 21, 2011, 03:04 PM
Kashia Kashia is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2010
Posts: 25
Is there a difference between a county mental health therapist vs a private therapist or one associated with a clinic, health care facility or HMO?
I mean as far as therapy goes?
It feels like very structured in CMH - and have never felt this before with other therapists.
She became defensive when I was talking about some books authors I read, saying "no ego is not that, but if
this helps you then fine. Sesson is over, see you next week" -

Last edited by Kashia; Jun 21, 2011 at 03:18 PM. Reason: no one replies to my post, maybe reword it

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  #2  
Old Jun 21, 2011, 03:20 PM
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BlessedRhiannon BlessedRhiannon is offline
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Location: Texas
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I don't have any expereince with a county mental health therapist. I've always only seen someone in private practice.

However, I would wager that someone employed by the county probably has many more policies and processes that they must adhere to, which would probably make their general practice seem more regimented. They probably also focus more on skill building than indepth analysis, since they want clients to be on a short term path. That's just a guess, though.
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Thanks for this!
Kashia
  #3  
Old Jun 21, 2011, 03:34 PM
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dizgirl2011 dizgirl2011 is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2011
Location: UK
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Hey I live in the uk so things are different than the usa (if thats were you are).

However the main difference I think is that county mental health therapists may only be able to work with you for a limited period of time, or at least maybe more limited than someone privately. But that can be different with different therapists etc.

There are many possible differences but that is also applicable to therapists from the same stature, e.g, to private therapists may have very different ways of working.

In the Uk its very hard to actually see a therapist through the health system - you may see a mental health social worker or a psychologist for a short period of time etc but not a psychotherapist over a long period of time. Hence why I pay privately to see a therapist.

If you are finding your current therapist is defensive or not listening to you in a way that helps you can request to see someone else. It may have nothing to do with the fact of who she works for but her own personal approach to therapy which doesn't suit your needs perhaps.

xxx
Thanks for this!
Kashia
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